Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Hurricane Andrew 20th Anniversary August 24

JUNO BEACH, Florida -- The 20-year anniversary of Hurricane Andrew's landfall on Aug. 24,
serves as a powerful reminder to customers that a storm of that
magnitude will cause widespread devastation, including widespread
electricity outages, says Florida Power & Light Company. Therefore, it's the responsibility of all Floridians to be prepared.

Regardless of whether it's a rare Category 5 like Andrew, or the
lowest-level Category 1 storm, hurricanes are awesome forces of nature
that can cause significant damage. Customers need to have a family plan
to weather a storm or evacuate if necessary; the plan should include
coping with power outages.

Since the last major hurricane to impact Florida in October 2005, the state has over 1.2 million more residents and FPL has approximately 230,000 new customers.

"Some customers who have moved to Florida since 2005 may not have personally experienced a hurricane," said FPL President Eric Silagy.
"If a major storm hits our service territory, our customers have our
commitment that FPL will work around the clock and we will not stop
working until everyone is back in service."

While no electric company is storm proof, FPL has a comprehensive
storm plan that focuses on readiness, restoration and recovery to
respond safely and as quickly as possible if a hurricane strikes its
service territory.

FPL advances since Andrew

In the 20 years since Hurricane Andrew, FPL has invested to make its
electric system more resilient to storms, implemented significant
technological advances, and improved the efficiency of its emergency
response organization to speed-up restoration efforts. In addition,
there are tools and technology FPL uses today that didn't exist in the
early 1990's including improved weather information, Global Positioning
Systems, restoration spatial view and infrared technology.

Technology advancements now enable FPL to inform customers about
post-storm restoration processes faster. For example, hours after a
storm a preliminary restoration estimate is created through computer
modeling based on historical data. It will change as damage reports from
the field are complete, but it's intended to help customers and
communities make initial plans.

At the start of this storm season FPL unveiled its state-of-the-art, Category-5-rated Command Center in Riviera Beach, Fla., which will serve as the company's restoration nerve center when there's a storm.